From a perspective of MacOS / iOS and Android are all unix/linux variants .. it seems to make sense that Linux should be something that should be possible?

I'm not personally clamoring for it ; but I would very much like it if it was.

I would very much like to develop for Linux ; I think one thing that its missing is a larger base of applications id Software used to release on linux but they stopped after quake 3 arena .. i assume it wasnt big enough for them anymore once they got so huge?

But if I had a top 10 list of things to vote for for AGK I would say polishing out the feature set is a bit more important.

For instance on Android there is no way to stop music for your App when it goes to the background. I can't ship a game on Android for this reason. ( see my thread here on that topic : http://forum.thegamecreators.com/?m=forum_view&t=201614&b=46)

So Android is a huge platform but if my app keeps playing bloody music when its sent to the background that makes the customer pissed off and they will have to force quit or de-install it if it pisses them off bad enough. This would give me bad ratings on the marketplace and then I'd earn a reputation for being a novice developer who makes crappy apps that dont stop when they are told to?

See what I mean .. we need the feature set polished off more than we need another platform?

Approximate desktop usage as of december, http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_os.asp I use these statistics as most Apps these days are downloaded, and this is an approximate set of values covering users who use their devices to access the internet.

81.3 of the market goes to Windows based platforms.
8.7% of the market goes to MacOS
4.7% of the market goes to Linux based platforms.
2.2% of the market goes to mobile OS's

When you consider that the lions share of the market belongs to windows, that becomes the first obvious priority for support.

The next most popular is MacOS which is also supported.

4.7% goes to Linux. Now linux is a tricky one for several reasons.

1) There are various competing distributions, which should be supported? The two major ones are Debian and Fedora. With various other versions split between Open SuSe, Ubuntu, and there are yet more systems such as Arch Linux. That 4.7% is split across so many distributions, and several core bases.

2) Most linux users expect stuff to be free. This isn't a well established market place for paid for apps. Even apps with adverts are typically avoided by the community. Ubuntu is one of the few that comes with any kind of app store system.

The smallest portion of the market 2.2% seems to goto Mobile OS's.

The mobile OS market, iOS and Android mostly do very well with app sales. It is a heaven for indie developers, several small groups have become influential thanks to these market places.

I know that TGC would love to support every possible market place out there, but at the moment TGC supports the 4 most profitable markets for indie developers. I'm not sure anyone would really become a success using the pretty limited Linux marketplaces.

However, people are starting to try and appeal to the Linux market. There were some popular indie titles that made the jump to Linux and now Steam has a Linux section of its store and Unity3D 4 will deploy to Linux based system and of course, the Torque Game Engine has supported it for years. I think Valve is trying to push more for Linux and I think they could do it with some success given the kind of weight they can pull, I know the guy in charge isn't a big fan of the direction Microsoft is going and was pretty open about that fact with his opinion of Windows 8. There's only 41 Linux titles on Steam, but it's a good start, but Steam did start supporting Mac and its titles has soon grown since then.

Personally, I love Ubuntu and the good thing with Linux is that whilst there are different distributions, it doesn't mean you're writing for different OS's. Personally I think I would like to see Linux get more attention, it's a lot more user friendly these days and an idiot could get used to using it - particularly with some builds.

Hopefully we do see growth in the Linux market, I'd certainly boot up my Ubuntu more if there was. It'd be great to see AGK support in it too, but of course there's a lot of systems out there TGC could support, but I think Daniel puts it fairly, they've got to think in profitability...not just for themselves but their users. Maybe one day TGC will announce AGK Linux.

I agree, but the priority isn't really supporting linux but improving the core language, all this has to be maintained across multiple platforms as it is. I'd rather have better features for the more established market places, then slow TGC down. Of course I have absolutely no say in development! The dev team my feel different.

The biggest issue with developing for linux is the various installation methods, FPM, vs DEB vs Pacman or even just raw source code. That's four different build and package methods right there, and four extra systems for the dev team to load.

I think TGC would be better getting existing platforms working 100% before even considering a new one, and then I would imagine there are more important systems than linux to support. Linux really is just a fringe OS for home users. It will never take off in a big way. It is only for tech heads and web servers really It may take off on phones, but then again probably not. I have heard many times over the years that Linux is becoming a threat to windows etc, it has never really got close. Even fairly competent Windows users tend to find Linux horrible.

I would also like linux support. I use Ubuntu but sometimes check out the other top distros. Anything debian based would be the way to go. There's an app store. Support the desktop before the mobile.
I just got AGK about a month ago and noticed it had meego support.

As soon as agk supports java+opengl there should be no problem with linux support since java runs on all os's. There might of been someone who has said this before. I have been waiting for agk to come to java (not just android) for desktop/laptop use.

I think it would be awesome to have Linux support, but until Steam releases their console, is it really worth it? There are Android based gaming devices popping up left and right. I really think that Android should be the focus, though I'd really like to see HTML5 or Java porting so I could put a game on Facebook!

freedom engine is HTML5 but not java. The thing is though the java that tgc are working with is I believe an applet. Since I understand a great deal in programming with opengl and java I would probably alter the code to run on a java application (if possible... unless all they have are .jar). I also agree on the limitations of freedom engine, since I have trouble doing virtual buttons and http commands on it.

I am sorry but I have to reply to this! I have been a long support of your products, but you need to stop the early 2000 style response to Linux support.

Forget the useless statistics, they do not show a true picture of what is going on in the land scape right now.

Linux is not tricky in terms of what you support. Support Ubuntu, as it has the biggest share of the market place. Providing a .DEB package or generic binary package alone should suffice. The Arch etc users have already got Steam working without issues. So support the biggest portion and the others will work on porting the package. Additionally creating a standard binary installer like some companies have done will also help.

Again this is a view of a poorly researched response, Debian and Fedora are *not* the most popular and have not been for a very long time. Ubuntu is (yes some people don't like it) becoming the choice for desktops on Linux and some of its downstream distros like Mint too. Again support Ubuntu and many other distros like Mint will work fine. Yes and again Steam is already doing that.

"Most linux users expect stuff to be free" This is insulting and quite frankly wrong! Gaming on Linux is bigger than ever and is just growing month by month. We want to pay for games and the Humble Bundle shows that. If a platform can support development on games, you'll just end up with more business as indie developers flock to a working development SDK/AGK. On the Humble Bundle Linux users on average pay over $10, compared to Windows and Mac users paying around $6 for the bundle. The days of just seemingly free loading on anything that does not cost money does not convey the average Linux user.

Assuming that all business models work on software app stores is also wrong. The Windows platform has worked well for years without one, with Steam etc performing the game side of game delivery, if people prefer to go down that line. Being that Desura and Steam now have working support for Linux games, does this not sense to get in on it?

Unity, a major gaming development platform, yes at the moment does not allow development on Linux, but port straight out to Linux natively have realised that Linux is only going to get bigger and people are prepared to give out their cash. Torque already do too.

After all this, what I am saying is the comments are outdated and frankly wrong. If you don't at least allow for export of games to Linux, then you are losing out on a market place that will only get bigger. Indie developers will just go for other means of making their game. Check out Kickstarter, which you yourselves are using for re-writing FPS, games support Linux over a certain amount or even straight out of the door.

Please don't ignore the Linux market place..

Quote: "Approximate desktop usage as of december, http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_os.asp I use these statistics as most Apps these days are downloaded, and this is an approximate set of values covering users who use their devices to access the internet.

81.3 of the market goes to Windows based platforms.
8.7% of the market goes to MacOS
4.7% of the market goes to Linux based platforms.
2.2% of the market goes to mobile OS's

When you consider that the lions share of the market belongs to windows, that becomes the first obvious priority for support.

The next most popular is MacOS which is also supported.

4.7% goes to Linux. Now linux is a tricky one for several reasons.

1) There are various competing distributions, which should be supported? The two major ones are Debian and Fedora. With various other versions split between Open SuSe, Ubuntu, and there are yet more systems such as Arch Linux. That 4.7% is split across so many distributions, and several core bases.

2) Most linux users expect stuff to be free. This isn't a well established market place for paid for apps. Even apps with adverts are typically avoided by the community. Ubuntu is one of the few that comes with any kind of app store system.

The smallest portion of the market 2.2% seems to goto Mobile OS's.

The mobile OS market, iOS and Android mostly do very well with app sales. It is a heaven for indie developers, several small groups have become influential thanks to these market places.

I know that TGC would love to support every possible market place out there, but at the moment TGC supports the 4 most profitable markets for indie developers. I'm not sure anyone would really become a success using the pretty limited Linux marketplaces. "

I would love to possibly get my game on Humble Android Bundle in the future. I have bought a few of these myself. Only platform AGK doesn't support is Linux. I think Humble is a great way to get publicity. And these things pulls in tens of thousands of buyers and hundreds of thousands of dollars to split among developers, charity and Humble.

For those interested in Humble Bundle. I just got an email for the 5th Android bundle. 11h ago and it has already has sales of over half a million USD. And over 76'000 people have already bought the games. Head over to the site to see how it works, and check out the demo movie on top.

I have been a Linux user for 10 years and I have no problem paying for apps (I recently bought AGK just to try out AGKPas, which I think is an amazing piece of software). Most people I know choose Linux not because it's free, but because it lets you get the most out of your computer without the fear of lawsuit just because you "reverse engineered" a screensaver. I agree in 100% with mrmango - you may not support Linux if you don't consider it a profitable market, but you should be aware that Linux users are in much larger percent "techie guys" than average desktop users.

if I recall correctly I was running the AGK demo with Wine on Ubuntu a while back. (then again, I might not have been, my memory isn't the best
so it's possible to code on Linux, and every Linux user shold have Wine, so they can just run AGK apps that way can't they?